Fun fact! It's cheaper to buy a plane ticket, fly from Sydney to Los Angeles, buy a copy of Adobe Creative Suite Master 6 Collection, then fly back to Australia than it is to buy exactly the same product from the Adobe website within Australia.

Supposed pics of meteorite damage, but I'd take them with a grain of salt.

Also - According to unconfirmed reports, the meteorite was intercepted by an air defense unit at the Urzhumka settlement near Chelyabinsk. A missile salvo reportedly blew the meteorite to pieces at an altitude of 20 kilometers.

"Also - According to unconfirmed reports, the meteorite was intercepted by an air defense unit at the Urzhumka settlement near Chelyabinsk. A missile salvo reportedly blew the meteorite to pieces at an altitude of 20 kilometers."

If they actually managed to tackle that in that short of a notice, given that this was completely off the radar for all appearances, that would be an extremely impressive (and highly improbable) feat. As pointed out by a friend, our planet is moving at 29-30 km/sec (if someone actually knows a more specific/recent number, feel free to correct), so even if that meteorite was holding still... yeah, I have my doubts about Russian missile-defense units hitting that on the fly.

"The Bad Astronomer analyzes incoming reports about the apparent meteoric fireball over Russia: 'Apparently, at about 09:30 local time, a very big meteor burned up over Chelyabinsk, a city in Russia just east of the Ural mountains, and about 1500 kilometers east of Moscow. The fireball was incredibly bright, rivaling the Sun! There was a pretty big sonic boom from the fireball, which set off car alarms and shattered windows. I'm seeing some reports of many people injured (by shattered glass blown out by the shock wave). I'm also seeing reports that some pieces have fallen to the ground, but again as I write this those are unconfirmed." This is the best summary I've found so far, and links to lots of videos and images. He also clarifies something I've been wondering about: 'This is almost certainly unrelated to the asteroid 2012 DA14 that will pass on Friday.'"